Tr-41. 4-03-05-024 Telecommunications



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9.3Crosstalk

9.3.1Requirement


The crosstalk coupling loss for every port-to-port connection, over the 200 to 3400 Hz frequency band, should comply with the following criteria:

(1) The crosstalk coupling loss between any established connection through the voice gateway and at least 95 percent of all other through connections should be at least 75 dB, and it is desirable that this loss be at least 80 dB.

(2) The crosstalk coupling loss between any established connection through the voice gateway and any other through connection should be at least 70 dB.

Compliance with the crosstalk coupling loss recommendations should be determined as described in Annex A.9.


9.4Quantization Distortion


Ninety-five percent or more of all A/D and D/A connections should comply with the recommendations in Table 16, where the input signal is a 1004 Hz sinewave and the output distortion is measured using C-message weighting.

Table 16 - Voice Gateway Quantization Distortion Requirements



Input Signal

Input/Output Level Ratio

Level (dBm)

(dB)

0 to -30

35

-40

29

-45

25


9.5Single-Frequency Distortion


Ninety-five percent or more of all A/D and D/A connections in each connection category should comply with the following distortion limit:

  • For input signals at a constant 0 dBm level and any single frequency in the range of 0 to 12 kHz, the corresponding output signal power level at any other single frequency should not exceed -28 dBm.3

10Other Impairments


The following requirements apply to voice gateways intended to pass voiceband data. The following requirements are given, in addition to the voice requirements, to verify that the voice gateway will function in a manner that will not be seen as an impairment to the performance of voiceband data modems.

10.1Intermodulation Distortion


Intermodulation or harmonic distortion is caused by nonlinearities present in the electric-to-electric transfer function of the voice gateway. This form of distortion is of primary concern to the transmission of data.

Intermodulation distortion is measured using the four-tone method that employs two pairs of equal-level tones transmitted at a total, composite power level of -13 dBm. One pair consists of the frequencies 857 and 863 Hz; the second pair uses the frequencies 1372 and 1388 Hz.

Intermodulation distortion is measured as the second- and third-order products resulting from the application of the four tones. The second- and third-order products are denoted as R2 and R3, respectively. R2 is the average power level in the 503-to-537 Hz and 2223-to-2257 Hz frequency bands, expressed in dB below the received power level. R3 is the total power level in the 1877-to-1923 Hz frequency band, expressed in dB below the received power level.

At input port signal power levels other than 0 dBm, the four-tone signal power levels should be shifted by a value that corresponds to the difference between the signal level at the interface and 0 dBm. Since the R2 and R3 products are expressed in dB below the received signal level, their values are not affected by non-zero reference signal levels.

The intermodulation distortion limits on 95 percent or more of all connections should meet or exceed the values given in Table 17.

Table 17 - Intermodulation Distortion Limits for Voice Gateways



Distortion Limits

(dB below received level)

R2

R3

46 dB

56 dB


10.2Envelope Delay

10.2.1Definitions


Envelope Delay (ED) of a system is the propagation time through the system of a low-frequency sinusoidal envelope of an amplitude modulated sinusoidal carrier. If the frequency range of interest is denoted by R4, the carrier frequency is varied throughout R to obtain the ED as a function of frequency. The carrier is 50 percent amplitude-modulated with a sinusoidal signal of frequency 83.3 Hz.

Relative Envelope Delay (RED) is the difference between the ED at a given frequency f and the global minimum ED within the range R.


10.2.2Relative Envelope Delay (RED) Requirements


(1) Station Interface-to-Trunk Interface and Trunk Interface-to-Trunk Interface

On 95 percent of the connections of this type



  • in the frequency range from 800 through 2700 Hz, the RED curve should lie below curve A in Figure 8;

  • it is desirable that in the frequency range from 500 through 3000 Hz, the RED curve lie below curve B in Figure 8.

(2) Station Interface-to-Station Interface

The requirements for this connection allow twice the RED of those in 10.2.2(1). More precisely, let A' be a curve obtained by multiplying by 2 each ordinate of the curve A in Figure 8 and let B' be a curve obtained by multiplying by 2 each ordinate of the curve B in Figure 8. Then the RED requirements for connections of this type are obtained from those in 10.2.2(1) by substituting A' for A and B' for B.

Figure 8 - Relative Envelope Delay vs. Frequency




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